BAR: Brazilian Administration Review (Feb 2021)

Why is academia sometimes detached from firms’ problems? The unattractiveness of research on organizational decline

  • Fernando Antônio Ribeiro Serra,
  • Manuel Portugal Ferreira,
  • Isabel Cristina Scafuto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1807-7692bar2020200005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 4
pp. e200005 – e200005

Abstract

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We examined how scholars decide what they study, scrutinizing researchers’ problem choice. We qualitatively analyzed a survey conducted by e-mail with 40 top management scholars on organizational decline in top-ranked journals. This topic appears to be neglected despite the real life evidence that the performance of firms is declining at an increasingly rapid pace. We conducted a content analysis of motivation to undertake, remain with, or abandon research. We found explanations for what researchers’ study specifically related to concerns over tenure and promotion, difficulty in conducting research, and the general unattractiveness of ‘negative’ themes that lead scholars to avoid a research topic. We contribute to studies on problem choice in management research by explaining why relevant economic and societal research agendas are under-researched. Our findings indicate that motivation not to undertake is related to extrinsic factors. Motivations to remain are usually intrinsic. However, motivations to abandon may be intrinsic, in order to move on to another research project, or extrinsic, depending on the situation. It also serves as a warning that scholars may be paying excessive attention to mainstream theoretical approaches and topics, inhibiting the emergence of new ideas and detracting attention from phenomena that are important for teaching.

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